Certainly, fixing the price of a kilo of pineapple or tapioca is something farmers don't trifle with. |
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Desserts were generally varieties of pap made from oatmeal, semolina, tapioca, or pudding rice cooked in either milk or buttermilk. |
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Coat the fish with tapioca starch, patting off any excess, place in the fryer, and cook until golden brown, about five minutes. |
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Only 12 items, including tapioca starch, frozen shrimp, longan and pineapple, remain to be resolved, ministry officials said. |
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The bubbles in bubble tea are actually oversized tapioca pearls, made from cassava root starch and caramel. |
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Another staple of Liberian cuisine is cassava, a tropical plant with starchy roots from which tapioca is obtained. |
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Refining alcohol would use tapioca as a raw material and the new industry is expected to lift the price of this agricultural product. |
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Amber comes over as I'm mixing the filling, this time using tapioca and cider vinegar. |
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George is now on a special dried food made of oily fish and tapioca, with occasional chicken or turkey as a treat. |
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One example is the brand's Egg Replacement, which comes in a box and uses potato starch and tapioca flour as a base. |
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The Chinese themselves tend to use tapioca when glutinousness is required, and arrowroot or sometimes cornflour when it is not. |
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Foods introduced since European contact include tapioca, groundnuts, and a wide array of vegetables and fruits, plus cattle for beef, and deer. |
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Some alternatives which produce results similar to gelatin are agar-agar, carrageenan, tapioca, sago, guar gum, pectin, and rennet. |
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Spaniards and Portuguese adapted this name to tapioca, in which form it became an adopted English word in the late 18th century. |
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Local people cultivate tapioca, rice and vegetables on the heavily silted riverbed. |
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Other produce includes coal, coconuts, sugar cane, pineapples, tobacco, vegetables, sago, tapioca, coffee, tea, maize, and groundnuts. |
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I ate three containers of tapioca pudding when I got there just to make sure. |
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The owner is selling tea and coffee with tapioca balls placed in the bottom of the cup. |
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For dessert, buttermilk panna cotta sprinkled with citrus wedges and toasted pine nuts is a far cry from mom's tapioca. |
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He never told the commissary to make tapioca pudding no matter how often I asked. |
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Black tapioca pearls are made of a mixture of sweet potato flour, tapioca flour and brown sugar, which gives the pearls their distinctive color. |
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A basic meal comprises a starch food, preferably soft or hard taro, tapioca, or rice, and a protein food, normally fish. |
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Drain the grenadine chestnuts, reserving the marinade, and toss with half the tapioca flour. |
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For the tempura batter, in a medium bowl, combine the flour, tapioca starch, salt, and sugar and stir well to combine. |
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And after the evening meetings delegates enjoyed the traditional tapioca pancakes available from stalls in the town square. |
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You don't need to know what I think of tapioca, even with vanilla, coconut, and anise. |
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The buffet each day is complete with desserts made of tapioca, pumpkin, coconut, and bananas. |
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The wrapper in this case is made primarily from tapioca starch, which imparts a translucent sheen to the roll. |
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We'd sit in store front Thai noodle houses, eating Pad Thai, and drinking mango bubble tea with wide pink and green straws that sucked up the tapioca balls at the bottom. |
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The main agricultural products are rice, tapioca, sugar, corn, and fruits. |
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Spam fritters, tapioca and stewed prunes are also on the school's menu. |
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Adhesive Corporation writes us to point out that the stickum on envelopes is not made of dead horses but of tapioca. |
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Fish eyes, frogspawn or eyeball pudding – synonyms for Britain's most hated school pudding, tapioca. |
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Such words as hominy, moccasin, pone, tapioca and succotash remain everyday Americanisms. |
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There's a powder of roasted cashews blended with tapioca maltodextrin, which makes the powder fluffier. |
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The rations I wanted were 20 bags of flour, 6 bags of sugar, a couple of bags of rice and tapioca, 50 pounds of tea, and 50 pounds of nicki-nicki. |
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Beef, water, tapioca starch, salt, toasted wheat crumb, dextrose, wheat gluten, monosodium glutamate, spice. |
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It feels particularly pleasant because of the addition of tapioca, bisabolol and cupuacu butter. |
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His father grew millet, corn and tapioca on a very small piece of land, barely enough to feed the family. |
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Niueans cultivate both root crops such as talo, yams, and tapioca, and tree crops such as coconut, breadfruit, papaya, and mango, as well as bananas. |
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Quite a few of these loafs use potato starch and tapioca starch in attempts to produce a lighter, fluffier product. |
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And a souplike dessert cup of tender, mealy taro root in gentle coconut broth, speckled with tiny grains of tapioca, is absolutely strange and absolutely delicious. |
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Paper mills use starches from various sources, such as regular corn, waxy maize, tapioca, potato, and wheat. |
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I also love milk tea with tapioca bubbles from Chinatown. |
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Additionally, the mealy bug infestation in Thailand has reduced the availability of tapioca starch-based products, which has caused further supply pressure. |
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The celeriac was brought out on a gueridon, and with the kind of ceremony usually reserved for Chateaubriand, the chef sliced it in half and scooped chunks of the tender inside into a bowl atop some jellied tapioca. |
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Cut it open and you'll find a white, creamy pulp that looks a little like custard or tapioca pudding. |
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They examined the effects of xanthan gum on the thermal properties of tapioca starch using a differential scanning calorimeter. |
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For make-your-own boba tea instructions and to buy vacuum-sealed tapioca balls and other supplies, visit www. |
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Tonight a Morris dancer and his belly-dancing partner are forced to get creative with fish sticks, seaweed and tapioca. |
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So it is not much eaten by city dwellers. In this section Hungry for votes High life Second helpings of tapioca pudding A waxing crescent ReprintsBut it has one amazing plus. |
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High-polymeric carbohydrate material usually derived form cereal grains such as corn, wheat and sorghum, and from roots and tubers such as potatoes and tapioca. |
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Spoon the tapioca into 2 large glasses. Add the tea mixture. |
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The group of by-products, which contributes significantly to the margin, continues to have an important gap compared to 2008 exclusively due to the delay taken by the Thai authorities in marketing their tapioca stocks. |
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Music is the frozen tapioca in the ice chest of History. |
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In the United States, puddings are nearly always sweet desserts of milk or fruit juice variously flavoured and thickened with cornstarch, arrowroot, flour, tapioca, rice, bread, or eggs. |
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In her coat pocket was a menu dated April 12, which offered foods such as mutton chops, Melton Mowbray pie and tapioca pudding. |
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She served me bowls of tapioca pudding and enthusiastic recaps of errands she had run, her face like that of a female Yoda. |
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She felt as if she were swimming through a big bowl of icy tapioca pudding. |
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Starches, typically found in corn, potatoes, arrowroot and other plants, are most familiar to consumers as cornstarch, potato starch and tapioca starch. |
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It worked with the Central Tuber Crop Research Institute to identify varieties of tapioca that yield the desired thin slice and yet assure crunchiness. |
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Dishes on the menu from the first-class restaurant include mutton chops, roast beef, Melton Mowbray pie, lamb and mint sauce, ox tongue, tapioca pudding and greengage tart. |
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Among the restaurants sample menu is pearl oyster and sea scallop sashimi, fennel milk, summer squash, smoked eel tapioca, egg white pearl flower, and wasabi. |
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Compared to Japan and South Korea, Taiwan consumes less rice and tapioca than oils, fats, meats and fruits, a trend the COA encourages locals to reverse. |
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With no chemicals or artificial components and free from genetic modification, Ezimoist, which is a form of tapioca, is the ideal phosphate replacer. |
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